How a print ages

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NB23

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Here it is, if you were curious.

A properly fixed and washed Ilford 5x7 RC print that’s been taped on a cashier desk, in a hairdressing salon, for 12 years.

Yes, according to the Ilford litterature I remember reading, a hairdressing salon is the worst place you can hang a Black and white wet print. The air is just too polluted.

Interesting facts:

- The RC print did start to turn brown and stain very quickly. Within 6 months it was sepia. Within a year, it was in a general bad state. I’d say it decayed 50% within the first year. Afterwards, the decay continued but much slower, until the state in which it is today.

-All other photographs, prints and posters are still intact as they were 12 years ago: I can discern no decay at all, no loss of color, no loss of contrast.

This includes Magazine pages that have been framed, a regular poster, a black and white inkjet pigment print, a laminated poster. A CVS pharmacy 4x6 color print on pearl paper, All look as good as the first day.

—-

I’m kicking myself for not having bothered, 12 years ago, to include a 5x7 RC print which was Selenium toned, and another one Brown toned (reputed for its excellent archival properties). And a FIBER print as well.

The major change occured within the first year. I will make a new experiment involving a well fixed and brown toned 5x7 fiber print which appears to have failed the residual hypo test. I am curious to see how a properly processed and toned fb print, but not very well washed, will stand the test of time and polluted air.



91C61592-0F6F-450D-9B1D-1785E7030753.jpeg
 

Vaughn

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This is one of the first prints I made -- self-portrait. Printed in the employee darkroom on the rim of the Grand Canyon in 1977. Was in a cheap frame and average Crescent board of the time, and proudly displayed by my parents for 30 years, give or take. A second copy was tossed in with some other prints in a box and still looks as good as new.
 

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takilmaboxer

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Mar 3, 2007
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East Mountains, NM
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Med. Format RF
I have RC and fiber prints, both carefully processed, of equal age, and displayed in a sunny room for 20 years. The RC prints are sepia but the FB prints look like new. Identical RC prints stored in the dark are good as new.
Go figure.
 

Horatio

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The portrait of my grandfather I made on 5x7 Kodak RC paper nearly 50 years ago has held up well. It’s in a small frame sitting on a bookshelf at my parents’ house. There are several others in albums I’ve not seen in a few years, but were holding up well. Frankly, it’s a miracle because I knew nothing of archival processing back then. I hope to make wet prints again one day.
 

Paul Howell

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I have Kodak RC prints from the 70s that look like they were just printed, on the other hand my GAF RC prints are fading. I know that some printed with GAF and their prints held up, not sure what I did wrong.
 
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